श्रद्धामाहात्म्यं तथा देवीप्रश्नः
The Greatness of Śraddhā and Devī’s Question to Śiva
ध्यानम्मद्रूपचिंताद्यं नात्माद्यर्थसमाधयः । ममागमार्थविज्ञानं ज्ञानं नान्यार्थवेदनम् । बाह्ये वाभ्यंतरे वाथ यत्र स्यान्मनसो रतिः । प्राग्वासनावशाद्देवि तत्त्वनिष्ठां समाचरेत्
dhyānammadrūpaciṃtādyaṃ nātmādyarthasamādhayaḥ | mamāgamārthavijñānaṃ jñānaṃ nānyārthavedanam | bāhye vābhyaṃtare vātha yatra syānmanaso ratiḥ | prāgvāsanāvaśāddevi tattvaniṣṭhāṃ samācaret
La méditation est la contemplation qui commence par Ma Forme; elle n’est pas une simple absorption dans des objets tels que le soi et autres. La vraie connaissance est l’intelligence du sens de Mes Āgamas, non la connaissance d’objets mondains. Ô Devī, au dehors comme au dedans—là où l’esprit trouve sa joie—sous l’influence des tendances anciennes, qu’on cultive avec constance l’établissement ferme dans la Réalité (tattva).
Lord Shiva
Tattva Level: pati
Shiva Form: Dakṣiṇāmūrti
Shakti Form: Pārvatī
Role: teaching
It defines authentic Śaiva meditation and knowledge as God-centered: dhyāna begins with contemplation of Śiva, and jñāna is the realized meaning of Śaiva Āgamas, culminating in tattva-niṣṭhā (steadfast abidance in the highest Reality) rather than mere object-focused mental states.
By stating that meditation begins with “My form,” the verse supports Saguna upāsanā—such as worship of Śiva as Liṅga or as a personal form—as a legitimate doorway to inner absorption, which then matures into stable abidance in tattva (the ultimate Śiva-principle).
It suggests sustained dhyāna on Śiva (form-based contemplation) guided by Āgamic meaning, and training the mind to rest inwardly or outwardly wherever devotion naturally arises—then converting that attraction into steady tattva-niṣṭhā through regular practice (often supported in Śaiva praxis by mantra-japa such as the Pañcākṣarī).